| This article originally appeared in the LA Times on March 16, 1998
Copyright Los Angeles Times

Check out the LAUSDs Student Learning Standards for the Visual and Performing Arts

To learn more about the LAEP's work with humanities curriculum, visit the Humanitas Web page

Neil Anstead, academic director of LAEP's Humanitas program explains why an arts curriculum is essential in todays world

Educators, check out these art resources for lesson plans and curriculum ideas
|
Arts Instruction to Make Comeback in Schools
By DOUG SMITH, Times Education Writer
After decades of drift in teaching of the arts, Los Angeles schools
at last have been given a clear mission to imbue every student with the
knowledge of music, dance, drama and visual expression.
Riding a nationwide wave of renewed interest in arts instruction, the
Board of Education adopted standards last week that will incorporate the
arts at all grade levels with testing to ensure that students learn.
As a condition of graduation, every student--including those who are
not artistically inclined--would have to demonstrate an ability to
interpret art and to create it.
It will be at least three years before the standards are fully in
force, and school district staffers have yet to estimate the cost of
building an instructional program. They are expected to submit an
implementation plan to the school board in about two months.
Board member Valerie Fields, who made the restoration of arts
instruction a theme of her campaign for election to the board last
spring, said she hopes to start with a full-blown proposal that can be
trimmed if necessary.
"We're not going to be able to do it all at once," she said.
In a unanimous vote approving the standards last week, the often
divisive board expressed determination to make the plan work.
"We'll find the money," said board member Barbara Boudreaux.
The standards set benchmarks for the knowledge and skill that students
should have in the fourth, eighth and 10th grades and upon graduation.
At each benchmark grade, there is a theoretical and a practical
component. Fourth-graders would be required to use the terminology of
dance, music, theater and visual arts and to identify connections between
the arts and lifelong learning skills.
On the practical side, they would use the body to express the elements
of time, space and force. They would also read and write simple musical
notation, create improvisational dramatizations and create original works
of visual art in a variety of media.
In the secondary grades, the requirements would be similar but more
demanding. Eighth-graders, for example, would be expected to analyze the
artistic and social characteristics and functions of art in various
cultures and historical periods.
They would be expected to describe the use of melody, harmony, rhythm,
form, tempo, dynamics and tone color when reading or listening to music.
High school students would be able to focus on only one of the four
disciplines, but with ever greater facility.
In dance, for example, they would have to design, perform and critique
dance sequences.
Considerable help in teacher training is expected from the bountiful
arts organizations of Los Angeles, whose elite leaders appeared before
the board to show their support.
"All of us stand ready to serve as your partner in making these new
arts learning standards come alive for students and teachers," said
Harold Williams, president emeritus of the Getty Trust and the chairman
of a district arts education committee convened by Fields to help develop
standards. "But we cannot do your job for you. The core of arts education
in Los Angeles Unified School District must be high-quality instruction
as part of the basic curriculum in the regular school day."
Members of the arts education committee--among them leaders of large
corporations, the major city and county arts agencies and several arts
groups--have reviewed the standards and will help district staff develop
curriculum, lessons and, finally, testing procedures.
Adoption of the new standards places Los Angeles Unified ahead of the
curve in California, which will soon have statewide guidelines on what
public school students should learn about art.
Saying that a revitalized commitment to the arts can help strengthen
California's economy, state Supt. of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin
vowed in November to make visual and performing arts education a priority
in public schools.
"The lack of attention to arts education has been the silent crisis in
California schools for too long," Eastin said during a visit to Hollywood
High School, which is a performing arts magnet campus. "It is time to
turn that crisis into a renaissance."
Because the district's standards were based on a national model
created under the Goals 2000: Educate America Act, Don Dustin, the
district's director of performing and visual arts, said he is confident
that they will meld with the state's eventual standards.
Because of the dearth of qualified instructors after two decades of
neglect, the most difficult hurdle will be training teachers in all the
district's 660 schools, Dustin said.
"If you were to look at the available arts teachers today and project
what's coming out of universities, it would take too long to hire enough
teachers to do the standards in all four disciplines," Dustin said.
The teaching of art has been diminished by several changes in the
educational landscape, beginning with Proposition 13, the 1978 property
tax limitation that sapped funds from school districts.
Equally damaging, Dustin said, was subsequent legislation that put a
limit on class size, inadvertently curtailing the practice of pooling
classrooms to free a teacher for programs such as music and drama.
The movement to toughen graduation requirements has also made it more
difficult for students to take art electives, Dustin said.
Under the current graduation requirements, students choose between one
course in art and one course in a foreign language.
Yet, despite the widespread perception that Los Angeles schools are
devoid of arts instruction, the number of students enrolled in art
classes has climbed significantly in the past decade.
About 106,000 middle and high school students--more than a third of
the total--are enrolled in visual or performing arts classes, a 7%
increase from a decade ago, Dustin said.
The problem is that with too few art teachers to go around, too many
schools lack a program.
"It's a scatter-gun approach," Fields said.
She said she learned that while working with a nonprofit group that
offered free jazz classes to high school students at the Music Center.
"Master teachers complained to me that these high school children were
not where they should be because most had not been exposed to music
education in elementary or middle school."
Although most high schools and many middle schools have teachers who
specialize in art, lower-grade teachers will have to be taught how to
weave the lessons into the general curriculum, Dustin said.
"In elementary we need to give teachers confidence to teach art on
their own, the way they teach language and math," he said.
|
|